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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

I REMEMBER MAMA (1948)

Producer/director George Stevens is mainly celebrated for his post WWII output (SHANE, AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY, GIANT), but he was at his best in the ‘30s, before shouldering all that significance. Still, this overly studied piece of family nostalgia (about an extended Norwegian clan in San Francisco in the 1910s) holds up nicely. It’s wonderfully cast (Irene Dunne, Barbara Bel Geddes, et al.) and boasts a subtly impressive look to it, the compositions & editing (Nicolas Musuraca & Robert Swink) are superb. (Watch for a tour-de-force sequence where Papa adjusts a window frame in the background as family drama swirls in the foreground.) Stevens’ typically studied pacing (set in stone from his early days with Laurel & Hardy) is nicely woven into the fabric here and the sequential moods of laughter, tears and small domestic triumphs are all but irresistible.

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